Dissoderma is a genus of parasitic fungi in the family Squamanitaceae. Basidiocarps (fruit bodies) superficially resemble normal agarics (gilled mushrooms) but emerge from parasitized fruit bodies of deformed host agarics.

Dissoderma
Dissoderma odoratum, Finland
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Class: Agaricomycetes
Order: Agaricales
Family: Squamanitaceae
Genus: Dissoderma
(A.H. Sm. & Singer) Singer (1973)
Type species
Dissoderma paradoxum
(A.H. Sm. & Singer) Singer (1973)
Species
Synonyms
  • Coolia Huijsman (1943) nom. inval.
  • Cystoderma subg. Dissoderma A.H. Sm. & Singer (1948)

Taxonomy

edit

Dissoderma was created in 1948 as a subgenus of Cystoderma and raised to generic rank in 1973. Though French mycologist Marcel Bon recognized and expanded the genus in 1999,[1] most other mycologists considered Dissoderma synonymous with Squamanita.[2] Molecular research, based on cladistic analysis of DNA sequences, has however confirmed Dissoderma as a genus distinct from Squamanita. A number of species previously referred to Squamanita have accordingly been transferred to Dissoderma.[2]

Description

edit

Dissoderma species can be distinguished from Squamanita species by their violet-grey pilei (caps) and upper stipes (stems). The lower parts of the stipes are host tissue and as such are often distinct and differently coloured. Known hosts include species of Cystoderma, Galerina, and Hebeloma.[2]


See also

edit


References

edit
  1. ^ Bon M (1999). "Flore mycologique d'Europe 5: Les Collybio-Marasmïoïdes et ressemblants ordre Tricholomatales, sous ordre Collybiineae". Documents Mycologiques Mémoire Hors Série. 5: 1–171.
  2. ^ a b c Saar I, Thorn RG, Nagasawa E, Henkel TW, Cooper JA (2022). "A phylogenetic overview of Squamanita, with descriptions of nine new species and four new combinations". Mycologia. 114 (4): 769–797. doi:10.1080/00275514.2022.2059639. PMID 35695889. S2CID 249623155.